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We are social entrepreneurs, too! Different network strategies in the field
of “social oriented economy “ in Catalonia
José Luis Molina, Hugo Valenzuela, Miranda J Lubbers, Paula Escribano, Juergen Lerner
Julieta Martínez, Marta Lobato, Sara Revilla, and Aurelio Díaz
MINECO (CSO2012-32635) Sunbelt XXXV. Brighton, UK June 23 – 28 , 2015
Presentation structure
1. The political/economic crisis in Spain and Catalonia (2008-2015).
2. The research: goals and methods. 3. The field of the “social oriented economy”
1. Classification of cases. 2. Clustered graphs. 3. Geographical embeddedness. 4. Position generator. 5. NTIC role in the venture.
4. Conclusion and discussion.
The political/economic crisis in Spain and Catalonia (2008-2015)
• The “financial crisis” affected Spain’s economy dramatically because its former dependence from the construction sector (debt). 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
GDP 1,1 -3,6 0,01 -0,6 -2,1 -1,2 1,4 3,5
% unemployment 9,6 17,24 19,84 21,08 24,19 26,94 25,93 23,78
-5
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
Spain GDP/ Unemployment rates 2008-2015
2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
Spain 3422239 3355830 3291263 3250576 3199617 3146570 3119310
290
300
310
320
330
340
350
x 1
00
00
Enterprises in Spain (2008-2014)
Resilience of the Social Economy
24738 24172
23129 22595 22178
21120 20258
4056 3962 4023 4071 4122 4169
0
5000
10000
15000
20000
25000
30000
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Coops in Spain and Catalonia (2008-2014)
Coop Spain
Coop CAT
Emergence of a new arena: the social oriented economy ….
• The emergence of a new arena after 2010 cuts on social expenditure made by the former Socialist party, expanding de facto the social economy sector.
• Former areas of activity (directly or indirectly supported by public spending), the traditional social economy sector, and new actors mix in the new arena: – Third sector: NGOs, local development, health services for
aging people / minorities, services related with migration… – Coops (commercial, “green” and/or “socially” oriented), – new entrepreneurs presenting themselves as “social
entrepreneurs”, and – social activists claiming for global social transformation
through cooperative/collectivist initiatives.
Emergence of a new arena: the social oriented economy ….
• The whole sector of “Cajas de Ahorros” (savings banks) disappeared after the financial crisis. Their social programs disappeared as well (popular libraries, support to old/disabled people, grants, international development …).
• Big Banks (BBVA, La Caixa …) took the baton from the state in collaboration with Business Schools (ESADE in Catalonia) with a key role in developing the field of “social entrepreneurship”.
Solidarity/alternative initiatives
• At the same time new initatives enlarged the field of social activism from politics to economy.
• Alternative/ solidarity economies usign social currencies, intensive communication technologies, playing on the formal/informal limits, presenting themselves as exemple of a new society.
The research: goals and methods
• “Social entrepreneurship”: local embeddedness, social networking sites and theoretical development - ENCLAVE (2013-2015). www.egolab.cat > Projects
• Mixed methods: – Ethnographic observation.
– Survey (mixed RDS).
– 40/50 cases. Personal network interviews (multiple name generator + position generator) with EgoNet (35 so far).
Clustered graphs (individual and group level)
Strong ties + support venture
Weak ties + support venture
Others
Brandes, Ulrik, Jürgen Lerner, Miranda J. Lubbers, Chris McCarty & José Luis Molina, "Visual Statistics for Collections of Clustered Graphs" , proceedings of the 2008 IEEE Pacific Visualization Symposium. March 5-7, Kyoto, Japan
Examples of personal networks
Examples of personal networks
Classifying cases in the “social oriented economy” field
• We classified each case (N=35) along an axis from -1 (Market oriented) to +1 (Exchange oriented) using three criteria (taken from the EU reports):
– Local embeddedness.
– Democratic/horizontal management.
– Pricing (market oriented vs actual needs).
• Three groups (market oriented <0 and 11 cases, neutral 0, and 8 cases, and exchange oriented >0, and 16 cases).
Different networking strategies …
Market-orientedrvicios Exchange oriented
N=8 N=11 N=16 Test Statistic DF p-value Kruskal-W 8.469 2 0.014***
visone utility for clustering graphs: EgoNet2GraphML
Market oriented
Exchange oriented
Different levels of local embeddedness …
Market-orientedrvicios Exchange oriented
Welsh t-statistic p-value Log_dist 6.000893 < 0.001***
Different levels of social capital …
t-test mean left mean right Difference Average prestige 47.9 43.2 4.71 t df p-value Average prestige 2.66 23.05 0.013**
Market-orientedrvicios Exchange oriented
Different role of ICT in the venture …????
Market-orientedrvicios Exchange oriented
t-test mean left mean right difference ICT role 5.859813 6.457666 -0.59 t df p-value -2.66 699.67 0.007***
We are social entrepeneurs too!
Market-orientedrvicios Exchange oriented
• High visibility. • Funding available by
public and private actors. • EU/national policies (…)
Conclusion and discussion
• One of the consequences of the economic crisis is the enlargement of the former “Social Economy” sector in two directions, towards the market (social entrepreneurship), and towards the exchange (solidarity economy et al.), allegedly using its main attributes: adapted pricing, democratic management, and local embeddedness.
• This new arena shares the same legitimation discourse (sustainability, social goals...), supported by both public and private agents, but encompasses a fragmented civil society, with goals and networking strategies of different nature.
Conclusion and discussion
• Is the emergence of the social oriented economy sector a space where (educated) people who have been affected by the crisis converge in an effort to resist its dramatic effects, and by using all their available resources?